The Importance of being specific with EFT

During EFT workshops, you’ll sometimes see the instructor write “The 3 Most Important Things About EFT” on the board.

Then, under that, they write:

Specific EventsSpecific EventsSpecific Events

It’s our way of driving home the point that a focus on specific events is critical to success in EFT.

In order to release old patterns of emotion and behaviour, it’s vital to identify and correct the specific events that gave rise to those problems.

When you hear people say, “I tried EFT and it didn’t work,” the chances are good that they were tapping on generalities, instead of specifics.

An example of a generality is “self-esteem” or “depression” or “performance problems.”

These aren’t specific events.

Below these generalities you’ll find a collection of specific events. The person with low self-esteem might have been colouring a picture at the age of 4, when her mother walked in and criticized her for drawing outside the lines.

She might have had another experience of a school teacher scolding her for playing with her hair during class during second grade, and a third experience of her first boyfriend deciding to ask another girl to the school dance.

Together, those specific events contribute to the global pattern of low self-esteem.

The way EFT works is that when the emotional trauma of those individual events is resolved, the whole pattern of low self-esteem can shift. If you tap on the big pattern, and forget the specific events, you’re likely to have limited success.

When you think about how the big pattern like low self-esteem is established, this makes sense.

It’s built up out of many single events. Collectively, they form the whole pattern. The big pattern doesn’t spring to life fully formed; it’s built up gradually out of many similar experiences.

The memories engraved in your brain are of individual events; one disappointing or traumatic memory at a time is encoded in your memory banks. When enough similar memories have accumulated, their commonalities combine to create a common theme like “poor self-esteem.”

Yet the theme originated as a series of specific events, and that’s where EFT can be effectively applied.

You don’t have to use EFT to every single event that contributes to the global theme.

Usually, once a few of the most disturbing memories have lost their emotional impact, the whole pattern disappears.

Memories that are similar lose their impact once the most vivid memories have been neutralized with EFT.

Tapping on global issues is the single most common mistake newcomers make with EFT. Using lists of tapping phrases from a web site or a book, or tapping on generalities, is far less effective than tuning into the events that contributed to your global problem, and tapping on them.

If you hear someone say, “EFT doesn’t work,” the chances are good they’ve been tapping globally rather than identifying specific events.

Don’t make this elementary mistake.

List the events, one after the other, that stand out most vividly in your mind when you think about the global problem.

Tap on each of them, and you’ll usually find the global problem diminishing of its own accord.

This is called the “generalization effect,” and it’s one of the key concepts in EFT.